Ridgetop
Herd Master
Smart of you to realize that Coco is the dominant kid. Usually it is the larger bucklings that dominate their smaller sisters. The more the kids nurse, the more milk Dotti will produce for them. Some first time owners get worried and start supplementing with bottles and, while it makes the kids more attached to the owners, the doe's milk does not come in properly. Then the owners explain it by saying "she never had enough milk so we had to supplement". Unless the kids are getting too weak to nurse, you are wiser to let her supply catch up to them. Good going!
You definitely want your goats to believe they are part of your herd. Not just part of the herd, but the Herd Queen. There is always a herd queen and a dominant male in every flock or herd species. The herd queen is one of the older does, usually the matriarch, and is dominant. She is the one that determines where the herd goes, what forage is safe for them to eat, etc. That is the position of supreme authority. The dominant male is the only male allowed to breed with the females in his herd. He is also the protector of the herd, as well as doing battle against interloping males. He has a small coterie of junior males that are allowed to remain with the herd as long as they are subservient to him. The dominant male can be driven out by a younger male, but the herd queen retains her position until she dies or is unable to lead the herd.
Unlike sheep, goats will defend their herd if possible. Sheep will run before the predator which is how dog packs inflict such horrific injuries on an entire flock. I speaking from experience. Years ago I saw my goat herd form a defensive circle against a suspected predator. Kids are in the center, and the herd radiates out in order of younger to older females, surrounded by yearling to 2 year old bucks and the dominant male facing the main threat. All the older goats face outward against the threat. If the predator approaches too close, the dominant male will attack and drive it off. Behind the dominant male are lines of defense consisting of the younger bucks, the older females, the younger females down to defenceless kids. If the male is killed by the predator, usually the threat evaporates and the herd backs off and moves away while dinner is in progress. I had read about this behavior, and to see it in person was amazing. The "predator" was a young LGD I had just introduced and they did not know him yet.
Back to your position in the herd hierarchy - you are the herd queen and must be dominant. Hail! Queen Louannx!
You definitely want your goats to believe they are part of your herd. Not just part of the herd, but the Herd Queen. There is always a herd queen and a dominant male in every flock or herd species. The herd queen is one of the older does, usually the matriarch, and is dominant. She is the one that determines where the herd goes, what forage is safe for them to eat, etc. That is the position of supreme authority. The dominant male is the only male allowed to breed with the females in his herd. He is also the protector of the herd, as well as doing battle against interloping males. He has a small coterie of junior males that are allowed to remain with the herd as long as they are subservient to him. The dominant male can be driven out by a younger male, but the herd queen retains her position until she dies or is unable to lead the herd.
Unlike sheep, goats will defend their herd if possible. Sheep will run before the predator which is how dog packs inflict such horrific injuries on an entire flock. I speaking from experience. Years ago I saw my goat herd form a defensive circle against a suspected predator. Kids are in the center, and the herd radiates out in order of younger to older females, surrounded by yearling to 2 year old bucks and the dominant male facing the main threat. All the older goats face outward against the threat. If the predator approaches too close, the dominant male will attack and drive it off. Behind the dominant male are lines of defense consisting of the younger bucks, the older females, the younger females down to defenceless kids. If the male is killed by the predator, usually the threat evaporates and the herd backs off and moves away while dinner is in progress. I had read about this behavior, and to see it in person was amazing. The "predator" was a young LGD I had just introduced and they did not know him yet.
Back to your position in the herd hierarchy - you are the herd queen and must be dominant. Hail! Queen Louannx!